Adriano Celentano
Acting

Adriano Celentano

January 6, 1938 (88 years old) Милано, Италия

Also known as: Il Molleggiato, Адриано Челентано, آدریانو چلنتانو

Biography

Adriano Celentano (born 6 January 1938) is an Italian musician, singer, composer, actor, and filmmaker. He is dubbed il Molleggiato (the springy one) because of his dancing.

Celentano’s many albums frequently enjoyed both commercial and critical success. With 150 million records sold worldwide, he is one of the best-selling Italian musical artists. Often credited as the author of both the music and lyrics of his songs, according to his wife Claudia Mori, some were written in collaboration with others. Due to his prolific career, both in Italy and abroad, he is considered one of the pillars of Italian music. Celentano is recognized for being particularly perceptive of changes in the music business, and is credited for having introduced rock and roll to Italy. As an actor, Celentano has appeared in 39 films, mostly comedies.

Celentano was born in Milan at 14 Via Cristoforo Gluck, and this address later became the subject of the famous song “Il ragazzo della via Gluck” (“The boy from Gluck Street”). His parents were from Foggia in Apulia and had moved north for work. His career as a singer started in 1959. Before his debut as an artist he was working as a watchmaker.

Heavily influenced by Elvis Presley and the 1950s rock ‘n’ roll scene as well as by American actor Jerry Lewis, Celentano started playing in a rock and roll band with Giorgio Gaber and Enzo Jannacci. Along with Gaber and Jannacci, he was discovered by Jolly Records A&R Executive Ezio Leoni, who signed him to his first recording contract and co-authored with Celentano some of his greatest early hits, including “24.000 baci”, “Il tuo bacio è come un rock”, and “Si è spento il Sole”. He first appeared on screen in Ragazzi del Juke-Box, a 1959 Italian musical film directed by Lucio Fulci with music by Ezio Leoni. In 1960, Federico Fellini cast him as a rock and roll singer in his film La Dolce Vita.

In 1962, Celentano founded the Italian record label Clan Celentano (which is still active) with many performers such as Don Backy, Ola & the Janglers, Ricky Gianco, Katty Line, Gino Santercole, Fred Bongusto and his wife Claudia Mori.

As a film director, Celentano frequently cast Ornella Muti, Eleonora Giorgi and his wife Claudia Mori. He and Mori have three children, Rosita, Giacomo and Rosalinda Celentano. Rosalinda is most notable to worldwide audiences for playing Satan in Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ. Celentano has also hosted several Italian television shows.

Celentano has retained his popularity in Italy for over 50 years, selling millions of records and appearing in numerous TV shows and movies. As part of his TV and movie work, he created a comic genre, with a characteristic walk and facial expressions. For the most part, his films were commercially successful; indeed, in the 1970s and part of the 1980s, his low-budget movies were top of Italian box office rankings. As an actor, critics point to Serafino (1968), directed by Pietro Germi, as his best performance. …

Source: Article “Adriano Celentano” from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Bingo Bongo

Bingo Bongo

1982 • Movie

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche

1975 • TV

Midi Première

Midi Première

1975 • TV

Numéro un

Numéro un

1975 • TV

Die Drehscheibe

1964 • TV

L'altra metà del cielo

L'altra metà del cielo

1977 • Movie

Movie Credits (54)

Acting

1982

Bingo Bongo

as Bingo Bongo

1977

L'altra metà del cielo

as Don Vincenzo Ferrari

1961

Hey, Let's Twist!

as Cantante (uncredited)

1980

La locandiera

as Cavaliere di Ripafretta

1983

Special Features: Handsome

as Mattia

1963

The Monk of Monza

as Un falso frate

1980

The Taming of the Scoundrel

as Elia Codogno

1980

Give Me Five

as don Fulgenzio

1960

La Dolce Vita

as Self (uncredited)

1979

Velvet Hands

as Ingegner Quiller

1960

Sanremo - La grande sfida

as Adriano Celentano

1985

He's Worse than Me

as Leonardo

1976

Lunatics and Lovers

as Sprint Boss

1986

The Grumpy

as Tito Torrisi

1981

Madly in Love

as Barnaba Cecchini

2010

1960

as Self (archive footage)

1968

Serafino

as Serafino Fiorin

1976

The Con Artists

as Félix

1973

The Five Days

as Cainazzo

1981

Ace

as Asso

Crew

1975

Yuppi Du

Director

1978

Geppo il folle

Director

1985

Joan Lui

Director

1964

Robbery Roman Style

Director

1975

Yuppi Du

Producer

1978

Geppo il folle

Producer

TV Credits (28)

Acting

1975

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche

as Self

1 episodes

1975

Midi Première

as Self

1 episodes

1975

Numéro un

as Self

1 episodes

1964

Die Drehscheibe

as Self

1 episodes

1980

Verstehen Sie Spaß?

as Self

2 episodes

1971

Disco

as Self

1 episodes

1974

Der große Preis

as Self

1 episodes

1977

Please Turn the Page

as Self

1 episodes

1964

Vergißmeinnicht

as Self

1 episodes

1988

Flitterabend

as Self - Singer

1 episodes

1994

NeXt

as Self

1 episodes

1969

Unsere kleine Show - Musik zur blauen Stunde

as Self

2 episodes

1978

Bio’s Bahnhof

as Self

1 episodes

1967

Europarty

as Self

1 episodes

1970

Treffpunkte

as Self

1 episodes

2019

Adrian

as Adrian (voice)

9 episodes

1968

Night-Club

as Self

1 episodes

1969

Wünsch dir was

as Self

1 episodes

2005

Rockpolitik

as Self

4 episodes

1981

Astro-Show

as self

1 episodes

Crew

2019

Adrian

Writer

2019

Adrian

Director

2005

Rockpolitik

Creator

2005

Rockpolitik

Director

2019

Adrian

Creator

2005

Rockpolitik

Creator

Personal Info

Known For
Acting
Gender
Male
Birthday
January 6, 1938 (88 years old)
Place of Birth
Милано, Италия
Popularity
2.7

Career Stats

54
Movies
28
TV Shows